海角社区 Shreveport Cyber Collaboratory Develops High-Tech Tools and Talent in Northwest Louisiana, Finds New Partners
April 05, 2021
Through the new 海角社区 Shreveport Cyber Collaboratory and partnerships between the university, Louisiana Economic Development (LED), the City of Shreveport, local K-12 schools, military, and industry鈥攊ncluding small business鈥攕tudents are starting to see what it actually means to boost high-tech innovation in northwestern Louisiana.

海角社区S senior Joshua Ricard and 海角社区S Cyber Collaboratory Director Scott Isaacs brought their new 3D scanner into the cockpit of a B-52 bomber on Barksdale Air Force Base this month to help the Air Force develop new virtual reality training programs for pilots.
鈥 Senior Master Sgt. Ted Daigle, U.S. Air Force
海角社区 Shreveport (海角社区S) senior Joshua Ricard is working toward a Bachelor of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Science in digital, interactive design. He did not expect to be sitting in the pilot鈥檚 seat of a B-52 bomber last week, operating a $25,000 handheld digital 3D scanner trying to capture every detail of the plane鈥檚 yoke, which is what the pilot holds to steer the plane:
鈥淚 asked, 鈥榊ou want me to do what?鈥
Ever since the Collaboratory opened last year, each new tool the team has received and added to their lineup has revealed a new need in the larger Shreveport community.
鈥淲e got the scanner, had literally just unboxed it, and the next day got the question, 鈥橦ey, can you help us with this?鈥 and, 鈥榃ell, we鈥檝e got this scanner鈥,鈥欌 Ricard remembers getting the call from Barksdale Air Force Base southeast of Bossier City. 鈥淚t was maybe our third time using the scanner and working on the base was definitely a unique experience, walking up to this giant machine, getting to see where they store the bombs and then crawling up inside.鈥
To get a full 360-degree scan of the back of the yoke, Ricard had to pull it back, hard.
鈥淲e needed a clean scan without my hands in it, and B-52s are basically all manual and mechanical; there is very little electronic stuff, so when you pull on something, it has a direct correlation on something else,鈥 Ricard said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no 鈥榩ress a button and it does all of the stuff for you.鈥 Everything takes effort.鈥
鈥淚t used to be that the military was on the cutting edge of R&D, which then trickled down to civilian sectors. But with technology advancing so quickly, this has now flipflopped, and it鈥檚 our job to transfer civilian technology to help solve military challenges by partnering with the innovators with the best solutions.鈥
STRIKEWERX Director Russ Mathers on his growing collaboration with 海角社区S (STRIKEWERX is the innovation hub of the Air Force Global Strike Command
This was not Ricard鈥檚 first time working with the Air Force, however. Through , the innovation hub of the Air Force Global Strike Command, recently housed in the Cyber Innovation Center in Bossier City, he鈥檇 been pulled into two other projects already: modeling and 3D-printing custom covers for transporter erector jack slots for intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, which had been filling up with dirt and snow, taking airmen hours to clean out. The other project was creating a custom jig for the Barksdale hydraulics shop so they could be precise in how they drill out pressure plates for brake shoes on B-52s, instead of eyeballing where the holes should go, risk missing the mark, and wasting expensive materials.
鈥淚t used to be that the military was on the cutting edge of R&D, which then trickled down to civilian sectors,鈥 said STRIKEWERX Director Russ Mathers. 鈥淏ut with technology advancing so quickly, this has now flipflopped, and it鈥檚 our job to transfer civilian technology to help solve military challenges by partnering with the innovators with the best solutions.鈥

Since opening its doors last August, the 海角社区S Cyber Collaboratory team has found that each new high-tech tool it has brought in and added to its lineup has revealed a new need in the surrounding community. Director Scott Isaacs fields ideas for collaborative projects on a weekly, near-daily, basis.
STRIKEWERX and 海角社区S formalized their relationship last year. The Cyber Collaboratory is now about to engage in yet another Air Force project, which is to prototype, test, and produce 100 clear acrylic bins to help store and organize vaccine vials, including COVID-19 doses, in refrigerators in military (and possibly civilian; the design will be open-source) hospitals.
鈥淚nstead of building our own maker space and buying our own equipment, 海角社区S is doing a great job in finding white space in what鈥檚 out there already, and filling in that space,鈥 Mathers said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cheaper and faster for us to partner with 海角社区S, and whether it鈥檚 their hologram table or 3D-printing or the new laser cutter they鈥檙e getting, the Cyber Collaboratory is providing the Air Force with capabilities and skills we need; things nobody else is doing. The idea for the vaccine bin came from one of our Airmen, a technical sergeant, and now 海角社区S is going to help us figure out how to actually produce it.鈥
Before the Cyber Collaboratory opened its doors last year, students and staff had already been putting its brand-new 3D printers to use in making personal protective equipment, or PPE, for the surrounding community, including custom head straps for face shields. The Collaboratory received from the American Electric Power (AEP) Foundation, which also provided . (Some of the PPE funds will now be repurposed for the COVID-19 vaccine bin project.)
鈥淲e had all of these new tools and the pandemic had basically shut everything else down, so the obvious question was, 鈥榃hat can we do for the community?鈥欌 recalls graduate assistant in the Cyber Collaboratory and master鈥檚 student in counseling Matthew Dixon. 鈥淐reative problem solving starts with a need, and a lot of what we do is coming up with right-now solutions. We must have printed close to 2,000 head straps and that was my first hands-on experience with 3D printing.鈥

When Eric Rippetoe, founder of the physical therapy company Bishop in Shreveport, connected with a high-impact sports client whose leg was larger than the print bed of his own 3D printer (Bishop creates custom knee braces through 3D printing and design), he reached out to the 海角社区S Cyber Collaboratory for help. Through their collaboration, Rippetoe now hopes to expand his business to also print flexible ankle braces. (Rippetoe holds a Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology from 海角社区 and a Doctor of Physical Therapy from 海角社区 Health Shreveport.)
鈥 Photo courtesy of Bishop
Since joining the Collaboratory, Dixon has been exploring the idea of using virtual reality headsets as part of counseling and therapy.
Another project in the healthcare realm recently connected Shreveport small business entrepreneur and physical therapist Eric Rippetoe of with the Collaboratory team. Together, Ricard and Rippetoe created a custom knee brace for a Bishop client who plays college football.
鈥淗is leg was larger than my print bed,鈥 said Rippetoe, who owns and operates his own 3D-printing equipment, but found himself in need of greater capabilities.
Ricard introduced him to the industrial 3D printer in the Cyber Collaboratory, which can create up to a one-meter cube.
鈥淲e had a few hiccups and ran out of filament mid-print, but Eric got his braces,鈥 Ricard said. 鈥淚 love the amount of experience I鈥檓 getting interacting with people like him and everyone else we meet through the projects we鈥檙e doing.鈥
鈥淚 initially didn鈥檛 think I was going to be able to do something like this in Shreveport, honestly,鈥 he continued. 鈥淚 expected to have to move away so I could actually do something with my 3D-modeling and printing skills, but now I feel like there鈥檚 a chance; staying in Shreveport is an option.鈥
鈥淸海角社区S Cyber Collaboratory] printers can also do custom circuit boards, which gave me the idea of integrating sensors into knee braces, for example. The sensor can then alert a player or coach or parent whenever the person wearing the brace has suffered a force that exceeds the limit for ACL tears. Each new tool is a new medium to create.鈥
Eric Rippetoe, founder of the Shreveport physical therapy company Bishop
This is because the Cyber Collaboratory acts like an incubator for technology-driven ideas, Rippetoe argued.
鈥淭heir printers can also do custom circuit boards, which gave me the idea of integrating sensors into knee braces, for example,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he sensor can then alert a player or coach or parent whenever the person wearing the brace has suffered a force that exceeds the limit for ACL tears. Each new tool is a new medium to create.鈥
Rippetoe plans on tapping other capabilities in the Cyber Collaboratory also. Their machines can 3D-print two different materials at the same time, which would allow Rippetoe to create fully flexible braces by printing a harder material around a soft material, like a scaffolding that then can be removed.
鈥淎nkle braces must allow a great deal of movement, but custom-printing them without the help of the Cyber Collaboratory would be near impossible for me since flexible materials tend to sway, and if they do, the print is ruined,鈥 Rippetoe said. 鈥淚 think a lot of people are just starting to understand the value of 3D printing, because you can make almost anything super-quick, and the tools at 海角社区S are spurring innovation.鈥

海角社区S student Matthew Dixon has been involved in projects integrating small Raspberry Pi computers into custom devices for computer vision and machine learning projects, including with the City of Shreveport.
Encouraging innovation in northwestern Louisiana and advancing student careers in technology was part of the reason Louisiana Economic Development (LED) contributed $1.2 million to a $3 million agreement with 海角社区S last November (led by LED FastStart, the nation鈥檚 premier state workforce training program) after the university had already invested $750,000 in the creation of the 10,000-square-foot Cyber Collaboratory as well as a design-thinking lab.
鈥淥ur administration is committed to ensuring that all our young people have ample access to the tools, programs, and training needed to compete in today鈥檚 marketplace,鈥 said Governor John Bel Edwards at the announcement of the agreement.
He was greeted at 海角社区S by the director of the Cyber Collaboratory, Scott Isaacs, who fields new ideas from the surrounding Shreveport community for collaborative projects on a weekly, near-daily, basis.
鈥淥ther than helping the Air Force with mission-critical needs they鈥檙e having a hard time filling right now, we鈥檙e also collaborating with other industry partners and the City of Shreveport, with whom we鈥檙e working on a number of Smart City projects to help improve city services through technology, including machine learning and computer vision,鈥 Isaacs said.
Last week, he was also sitting in the cockpit of the B-52 (best described by its full name, the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress) together with Ricard, making sure each of the scanned areas turned green on the screen by 鈥減ainting in the data鈥 the Air Force will use to develop the next stage of their virtual reality training program for B-52 pilots. The Cyber Collaboratory team will also create a physical model of the yoke, to be used as a custom controller.
鈥淲hat I think has been working really well is that getting us to come out isn鈥檛 a long and arduous process with requisition and approvals up and down the chain,鈥 Isaacs said. 鈥淭hey call, and we come out.鈥

Airmen from Barksdale Air Force Base use the 海角社区S Cyber Collaboratory for training and professional development.
Major Brandon Wolf, assistant director of operations for the 307th Operation Support Squadron at Barksdale and director of LR Werx, a 鈥渟park cell鈥 and local counterpart of AFWERX, which is the main innovation arm of the U.S. Air Force, agreed.
鈥淭here is a big push for innovation and increased operational capabilities in the Air Force right now and 海角社区S has allowed us to experiment and explore what we might be able to do with new and rapidly advancing technology,鈥 Major Wolf said. 鈥淥ur goal is to fail fast, and what that means is not that we鈥檙e trying to fail, but try new things quickly to see if they work and not sink a bunch of money into projects or prototypes that might be outdated by the time we get them into our hands.鈥
鈥満=巧缜鳶 has allowed us to experiment and explore what we might be able to do with new and rapidly advancing technology ... in a period of eight to nine months, we鈥檝e gone from 鈥楴o one was even thinking of this鈥 to 鈥楬ere鈥檚 my list of ideas.鈥欌
Major Brandon Wolf, assistant director of operations for the 307th Operation Support Squadron at Barksdale and director of LR Werx
鈥淭hat culture is changing, and in a period of eight to nine months, we鈥檝e gone from 鈥楴o one was even thinking of this鈥 to 鈥楬ere鈥檚 my list of ideas,鈥欌 Major Wolf continued. 鈥淥nce you start to improve, it highlights things you get used to in the day-to-day and don鈥檛 think of as problems. Then you realize, 鈥榠f we only had this鈥,鈥 it would make our lives easier and we鈥檇 be more efficient. And with each thing you fix, there鈥檚, 鈥榃hat else can we do?鈥 So, we鈥檙e going to be busy.鈥
The 3D scanner Ricard and Isaacs brought out to Barksdale Air Force Base was initially going to be a joint purchase by the 海角社区S departments of biology, kinesiology, history, and digital arts. But realizing how useful the tool could be to faculty, staff, and students in different disciplines across campus, the 海角社区S Foundation stepped in to cover the cost.
鈥淭his is an if-you-build-it situation where new tools spark new ideas,鈥 Isaacs said. 鈥淲e meet people by meeting people鈥攖hey hear about how we鈥檙e helping the Air Force and come to us to see if we can help them with things, too.鈥

STRIKEWERX partnered with 海角社区S and the Cyber Collaboratory to help prototype this transporter erector jack stand cover for intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs.
While Isaacs, Ricard, and Dixon dive deeper into projects, 海角社区S is also working on integrating the tools and experiences available through the Cyber Collaboratory into the curriculum for all students. And not just students at 海角社区S. Through a partnership with the Caddo Parish School Board and the Cyber Innovation Center, the Cyber Collaboratory team will teach a month-long course to 20 Caddo students this June. Called Cyber Lit 1, it will incorporate 186 hours of classroom time and count as high school class credit.
鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to host this summer camp as a way to continue the development of young talent in this area,鈥 said Julie Lessiter, vice chancellor of strategic initiatives at 海角社区S. 鈥淗aving these students on our campus in the Cyber Collaboratory increases their exposure to new and innovative technology that will become common-place in industry within a few years. Our goal is to provide as many learning opportunities as possible so students can be successful in their lives and careers in our increasingly digital economy.鈥